Classic American West Coast Boxing

kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal dies at 79; sports betting expert inspired movie 'Casino'

Image
Associated Press
Frank “Lefty” Rosenthal appears before a Senate hearing on gambling and organized crime. He invoked the 5th Amendment protection against self-incrimination more than 35 times.

By Dennis McLellan, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 16, 2008

Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal, the onetime Chicago bookmaker who ran four Las Vegas casinos in the 1970s and whose turbulent life and near-death experience with a car bomb inspired the movie "Casino," has died. He was 79.

Rosenthal, who was barred from casinos because of alleged mob ties, died of a heart attack Monday at his home in Miami Beach, a Fire-Rescue spokeswoman told the Associated Press.

Rosenthal, who was once called "the greatest living expert on sports gambling" by Sports Illustrated, is credited with bringing sports betting to Las Vegas casinos in the '70s.

"He really brought the glitz and glamour to what we now know as sports books," Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman said at a news conference Wednesday.

As a casino boss, Rosenthal was a demanding perfectionist who "wouldn't tolerate anything except the very best in customer service," said Goodman, who first represented Rosenthal as a young attorney in 1972.

One time, he recalled, when Rosenthal was walking through the Stardust and saw a cigarette butt on the casino floor, he picked it up himself -- then fired the person who was responsible for cleaning the area.

Although Goodman said Rosenthal always treated him "decently," Rosenthal once ordered his casino security men to crush the right hand of a card cheat he had caught.

"He was part of a crew of professional card cheats, and calling the cops would do nothing to stop them, so we used a rubber mallet -- metal hammers leave marks, you know -- and he became a lefty," Rosenthal recalled in a 2005 interview with the Miami Herald.

"I didn't care if they tried to scam other houses," he said. "I just wanted to make it clear that they couldn't do it at mine."

Rosenthal was a tall and lanky man with what a Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel writer a decade ago described as "a glare that makes him look like a menacing Fred Astaire." When asked how he stayed in such good shape, he responded, "By keeping my mouth shut."

Rosenthal, who during his Las Vegas heyday also hosted his own local TV talk show featuring celebrity guests such as Frank Sinatra and Muhammad Ali, was a man with a past.

Before a Senate hearing on gambling and organized crime in 1961, he invoked the 5th Amendment protection against self-incrimination more than 35 times, including when asked if he was left-handed.

In North Carolina in 1962, he was convicted for trying to bribe an amateur athlete.

After arriving in Las Vegas in 1968, Rosenthal launched a betting parlor. Wiretapped by the FBI, he was indicted on federal bookmaking charges, but a judge threw the case out on a technicality.

In 1969, Rosenthal had married Geri McGee, a statuesque blond and former topless showgirl, with whom he had two children.

The couple later divorced, after she had an affair with Rosenthal's Chicago boyhood friend, Anthony "Tony the Ant" Spilotro, who had moved to Vegas.

At the urging of his wife, Rosenthal got a job in a casino.

He was working as a floor manager at the Stardust Hotel and Casino in 1974 -- "The only guy below me was the shoeshine man," he later said -- when he was appointed to a $250,000-a-year executive position with Argent Corp., which owned or controlled the Stardust, Hacienda, Fremont and Marina hotel-casinos.

But in 1976, the state Gaming Commission ruled that Rosenthal was unsuitable for licensing to run casinos, partly on grounds of alleged organized crime associations.

Rosenthal always denied any charges of mob involvement or skimming profits from the casinos he managed.

"No one put me anywhere," he told the Palm Beach Post in 1995, "and I'm not the least bit concerned or amused that some think otherwise. No one controls Frank Rosenthal. Underline that. No one controls Frank Rosenthal."

On the evening of Oct. 4, 1982, Rosenthal had just finished dining at a Tony Roma's restaurant in Las Vegas when he got into his Cadillac Eldorado. When he turned on the ignition, a bomb under the gas tank exploded.

An unnamed law enforcement source told the Las Vegas Review-Journal at the time that Rosenthal had apparently started the car with the door still open.

"It blew him out of the car," the source said. "It's probably the thing that saved his life."

Rosenthal suffered minor burns on his face and legs.

Authorities had warned him a year earlier, the source said, that his life was in danger and that they had heard of plots to kill him.

After the attempt on his life, Rosenthal moved with his children to California and then to Florida. In 1988, the Nevada Gaming Commission listed him in the state's "Black Book" of people barred from casinos.

Rosenthal's life story was told in Nicholas Pileggi's nonfiction book "Casino," which inspired director Martin Scorsese's 1995 movie of the same name, starring Robert DeNiro as Sam "Ace" Rothstein, Sharon Stone as his wife and Joe Pesci as his mobster pal.

When the book and movie came out, Rosenthal was managing his nephew's bar and grill in Boca Raton, Fla., where he had moved in 1987.

"Let me tell you this," Rosenthal said of the movie, "I'm not Bob and he's not Frank."

In Florida, he also ran a sports betting website and served as a consultant for offshore casinos.

Born June 12, 1929, in Chicago, Rosenthal early on became a professional gambler who bet on football, basketball, baseball and boxing.

"You like something and you get into it," he told the Sun-Sentinel in 1994.

"I was studying all phases of gambling in my late teens. It's no different than anything else, like a doctor, a lawyer or a writer."

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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Image
Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal escaped death when a bomb under the gas tank of this car exploded in Las Vegas in 1982.
(Associated Press)
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

kikibalt wrote:Article courtesy of Robby

Image
Big, big win for Frankie Junior. One of his best, Frankie?
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Randyman wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image
My brother Mando
Frank, your brother looks like you in this photo. How is he doing? The reason I ask is that my cousin David Moreno, served two terms in Nam as well. He was never quite the same. He really got strung out on drugs over there and never really kicked the habit. Over the years he got paranoid, lost his zest for life and was unable to maintain normal relationships with people, especially women. In 1991, he was homeless and living in the MacArthur Park area in Los Angeles. According to witness' he was either buying or selling drugs from some guys in a car. One of the guys stuck a gun in his face and shot him. He died instantly. It's a sad, sad story and the roots of his problems began in Vietnam. A sad side note on all of this is that his body was lost for over a month. Somehow his body ended up in a mortuary in Compton where it was found. No explanation given It was tough.

Some guys can handle it, some can't. He struggled with it everyday. I can't imagine.
Randy, sorry to hear about your cousin David Moreno sad ending, Mando came back from Vietnam ok, he came home in 1972, around 1973 he join the LA county sheriff, he retired in 2006, sold his house in Whittier and moved to Wrightwood where he spents his time fishing Jackson Lake and riding his Harley.

P.S his son Chris is now with the LA county sheriff.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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bennie wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Article courtesy of Robby

Image
Big, big win for Frankie Junior. One of his best, Frankie?
Bennie, yes it was a good win for Frankie, Herrera, two fights before he fought Frankie had fought Eusebio Pedoza for the WBA featherweigth title, going into the 12th round before been stopped, good win for Frankie... :TU:

Frankie too had a good win over Juan Escobar, who in 1978 has fought a draw with Salvador Sanchez... :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Image

Manuel Ortiz vs PeeWee Lewis

Image

Image
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Photo and caption by Diego

Image
My youngest grest grandson Angel and my wife Maria. My grandaughter just got out the hospital after an operation for vaginal cancer. She's staying with us with her son Angel.

Go ahead devil. Take your best shot because I'm going to kick your ass.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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kikibalt wrote:Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal dies at 79; sports betting expert inspired movie 'Casino'

Image
Associated Press
Frank “Lefty” Rosenthal appears before a Senate hearing on gambling and organized crime. He invoked the 5th Amendment protection against self-incrimination more than 35 times.

By Dennis McLellan, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 16, 2008

Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal, the onetime Chicago bookmaker who ran four Las Vegas casinos in the 1970s and whose turbulent life and near-death experience with a car bomb inspired the movie "Casino," has died. He was 79.

Rosenthal, who was barred from casinos because of alleged mob ties, died of a heart attack Monday at his home in Miami Beach, a Fire-Rescue spokeswoman told the Associated Press.

Rosenthal, who was once called "the greatest living expert on sports gambling" by Sports Illustrated, is credited with bringing sports betting to Las Vegas casinos in the '70s.

"He really brought the glitz and glamour to what we now know as sports books," Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman said at a news conference Wednesday.

As a casino boss, Rosenthal was a demanding perfectionist who "wouldn't tolerate anything except the very best in customer service," said Goodman, who first represented Rosenthal as a young attorney in 1972.

One time, he recalled, when Rosenthal was walking through the Stardust and saw a cigarette butt on the casino floor, he picked it up himself -- then fired the person who was responsible for cleaning the area.

Although Goodman said Rosenthal always treated him "decently," Rosenthal once ordered his casino security men to crush the right hand of a card cheat he had caught.

"He was part of a crew of professional card cheats, and calling the cops would do nothing to stop them, so we used a rubber mallet -- metal hammers leave marks, you know -- and he became a lefty," Rosenthal recalled in a 2005 interview with the Miami Herald.

"I didn't care if they tried to scam other houses," he said. "I just wanted to make it clear that they couldn't do it at mine."

Rosenthal was a tall and lanky man with what a Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel writer a decade ago described as "a glare that makes him look like a menacing Fred Astaire." When asked how he stayed in such good shape, he responded, "By keeping my mouth shut."

Rosenthal, who during his Las Vegas heyday also hosted his own local TV talk show featuring celebrity guests such as Frank Sinatra and Muhammad Ali, was a man with a past.

Before a Senate hearing on gambling and organized crime in 1961, he invoked the 5th Amendment protection against self-incrimination more than 35 times, including when asked if he was left-handed.

In North Carolina in 1962, he was convicted for trying to bribe an amateur athlete.

After arriving in Las Vegas in 1968, Rosenthal launched a betting parlor. Wiretapped by the FBI, he was indicted on federal bookmaking charges, but a judge threw the case out on a technicality.

In 1969, Rosenthal had married Geri McGee, a statuesque blond and former topless showgirl, with whom he had two children.

The couple later divorced, after she had an affair with Rosenthal's Chicago boyhood friend, Anthony "Tony the Ant" Spilotro, who had moved to Vegas.

At the urging of his wife, Rosenthal got a job in a casino.

He was working as a floor manager at the Stardust Hotel and Casino in 1974 -- "The only guy below me was the shoeshine man," he later said -- when he was appointed to a $250,000-a-year executive position with Argent Corp., which owned or controlled the Stardust, Hacienda, Fremont and Marina hotel-casinos.

But in 1976, the state Gaming Commission ruled that Rosenthal was unsuitable for licensing to run casinos, partly on grounds of alleged organized crime associations.

Rosenthal always denied any charges of mob involvement or skimming profits from the casinos he managed.

"No one put me anywhere," he told the Palm Beach Post in 1995, "and I'm not the least bit concerned or amused that some think otherwise. No one controls Frank Rosenthal. Underline that. No one controls Frank Rosenthal."

On the evening of Oct. 4, 1982, Rosenthal had just finished dining at a Tony Roma's restaurant in Las Vegas when he got into his Cadillac Eldorado. When he turned on the ignition, a bomb under the gas tank exploded.

An unnamed law enforcement source told the Las Vegas Review-Journal at the time that Rosenthal had apparently started the car with the door still open.

"It blew him out of the car," the source said. "It's probably the thing that saved his life."

Rosenthal suffered minor burns on his face and legs.

Authorities had warned him a year earlier, the source said, that his life was in danger and that they had heard of plots to kill him.

After the attempt on his life, Rosenthal moved with his children to California and then to Florida. In 1988, the Nevada Gaming Commission listed him in the state's "Black Book" of people barred from casinos.

Rosenthal's life story was told in Nicholas Pileggi's nonfiction book "Casino," which inspired director Martin Scorsese's 1995 movie of the same name, starring Robert DeNiro as Sam "Ace" Rothstein, Sharon Stone as his wife and Joe Pesci as his mobster pal.

When the book and movie came out, Rosenthal was managing his nephew's bar and grill in Boca Raton, Fla., where he had moved in 1987.

"Let me tell you this," Rosenthal said of the movie, "I'm not Bob and he's not Frank."

In Florida, he also ran a sports betting website and served as a consultant for offshore casinos.

Born June 12, 1929, in Chicago, Rosenthal early on became a professional gambler who bet on football, basketball, baseball and boxing.

"You like something and you get into it," he told the Sun-Sentinel in 1994.

"I was studying all phases of gambling in my late teens. It's no different than anything else, like a doctor, a lawyer or a writer."

[email protected]
KNOW YOUR PLACE

When Rosenthal was setting the odds at the Sports Book at the Riviera in Vegas,the Mob sent Tony"The Ant "Spilotro out there to keep everyone in line. "The Ant" was a loose cannon. High on coke half the time.He thought nothing of killing anyone.

When Tamara Rand was trying to get a piece of the action in Vegas,she was told to back off. She went to my father to ask him to call Chicago so she could get an OK to move in. I don't know who my father talked to,but he told her if she persued and went to court,she would be in serious trouble. My father said just because she was a woman,the Mob would make an exception.

Spilotro came to San Diego to kill her and Frank Bompiensero(An Informant). What little Mob action there was in San Diego was localized at the Stardust Hotel in San Diego. A hang out of sorts. When "The Ant" was out here he saw my father at the Stardust.
"You know who I am?"asked Spilotro.
My father knew,but said,"No, who are you?"
"Well I'm Tony "The Ant."
"Never heard of you," said my father.
"Well You're gonna take orders from me. Understand?"
My father looked him in the eye.
"I take orders from Mooney(San Giancana) You understand?"
Spilotro turned on his heels and walked out. He'd been told.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

kikibalt wrote:Image
Dennis Andries
I had the dubious pleasure of watching Dennis fight a few times live. One of them was against Londoner Karl Canwell in early 1983 at the lovely old Lyceum Theatre in The Strand in West London. It was a music hall, built in 1809, complete with Royal Box. They constructed the ring so that the box was virtually overlooking it and seated in there the night I attended were Diana Dors, her husband Alan Lake and comedian Russ Abbott (among one or two others). Andries did his usual thing of clubbing an opponent into submission (he could certainly whack with the right) and then looked up and milked the acknowledgement from Dors and company. Sadly, Dors died of cancer just over a year later, and her grief-stricken husband, unable to face life without her, shot himself.
That night, however, Dors looked like and acted like the Queen of England. Regal.
Last edited by bennie on 17 Oct 2008, 03:08, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Bennie, a couple of pics. of Diana Dors

Image

Image
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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bennie wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Article courtesy of Robby

Image
Big, big win for Frankie Junior. One of his best, Frankie?
Bennie, the magazine (The Ring) I scanned the article from had Frankie as the #1 contender so you are right it was a big, big win.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Image
Tony "The Tiger" Baltazar
Circa,1971
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

kikibalt wrote:Bennie, a couple of pics. of Diana Dors

Image

Image
THE BEST PERSON TO HAVE IN YOUR CORNER

It's a two way street with women and boxing. In a way it's a lot like boxing. Someone is dishing it out and someone is taking a beating. I've seen fighters who were on a roll with a dame on each arm. Then the fighter starts to to take a beating and the girls take a powder. But I've seen it go the other way. Fighters who go through women and break their hearts like like they were breaking some tomato can's chin.

It's the pugs that have the wife in the end that wind up the winner. And usually the end ain't so good for him and the wife if you look at it on the surface.He's broke and is lucky if he's still got his health. The wife? Well you know he's got the real goods when she's still with him when the money is gone and sadly,so is his health.

The faithfull wife,who had put up with so much,is not only a wife ,but a caregiver and most of all, the closest and most loyal person he has in his life. It's sort of a bittersweet ending,but it's the sweet part of it that makes it worthwhile.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Courtesy Of Robert Bolanos, Robert is the nephew of Enrique Bolanos

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Roberto "Panchito" Bolanos.
Roberto is Enrique Bolanos brother.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Photo courtesy of Robert Bolanos

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Enrique Bolanos with George Raft
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Carmen Rocha dies at 77; waitress credited with introducing L.A. to nachos

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This photograph of Carmen Rocha, taken in the 1970s, was used on a souvenir postcard sold in El Cholo Mexican restaurant. Rocha started working at the restaurant on Western Avenue in 1959 and won a following with her warm, outgoing personality.

By Mary Rourke, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

Carmen Rocha, a waitress at El Cholo Mexican restaurant in Los Angeles for many years who is credited with introducing the city to nachos, the now-ubiquitous appetizer of tortilla chips, cheese and jalapeño peppers, has died. She was 77.

Rocha, whose photograph appears on one of the restaurant's souvenir postcards, died at her home in Los Angeles on Oct. 9. The cause was cancer, according to Rand Salisbury, whose family owns El Cholo.

She started working at the restaurant in 1959 and won a following with her warm, outgoing personality. "Carmen was wonderful, to me and to everybody," actor Jack Nicholson, a longtime regular at El Cholo, said this week. "It's a community loss," he said of her death.

For a special treat Rocha sometimes went into the kitchen and made her customers an order of nachos, an item not included on the menu. She followed a recipe she learned in San Antonio, where she grew up, layering tortilla wedges, shredded cheddar cheese and slices of jalapeño pepper, warming the dish in the oven. Before long she had requests from all over the dining room and her nachos were added to the menu.

"Carmen Rocha introduced an iconic dish and helped popularize it," said Merrill Shindler, who wrote "El Cholo Cookbook: Recipes and Lore from California's Best Loved Mexican Kitchen" in 1998. "Now, everybody eats nachos. If they were called 'Carmens,' not nachos, her name would be remembered forever."

Rocha worked at the original El Cholo on Western Avenue for close to 40 years and often socialized with her co-workers on Sundays when they stopped by her family's weekly open house. "She was a very loving person," said Linda Mendez, a waitress and longtime friend of Rocha. "People came to Carmen and asked her advice, even her customers did. You could talk to her."

Before Rocha retired in the 1990s, the restaurant lounge was renamed "Carmen's Cantina." By then she had been through knee surgery and was working "with a cane in one hand and a pitcher of margaritas in the other," Salisbury said. "She would have liked to keep working, but she had to quit for health reasons."

Born Carmen Salas on Oct. 6, 1931, in Seguin, Texas, she moved to San Antonio with her parents when she was young. She married Rudy Rocha in the 1940s and they moved to Los Angeles in 1959. The couple had six children before they divorced. Several of them later moved into houses down the street from their mother.

In November 1970, Rocha was at work when she learned that one of her three sons, Robert, who was in the Army, had been killed in Vietnam. She fainted and later couldn't stop crying, but the next day she was back at work. "People asked her, 'What are you doing here?' and Carmen told them, 'This restaurant is my home,' " Ron Salisbury, president of El Cholo and Rand's father, recalled this week.

When her son's name was inscribed on the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C., his middle name was spelled incorrectly. Instead of Robert Salas Rocha, it was written Robert Silas Rocha.

Carmen and her family spent close to 20 years trying to get the mistake fixed. Their first two appeals to the government were turned down. They were told that only "gross misspellings" were corrected. A third try brought change. The name of Rocha's son was re-inscribed. She and family members went to see it, as guests of the government, for a Memorial Day ceremony.

"If someone died for their country, he should at least have his name spelled correctly," Rocha said in a 2002 interview with The Times.

In recent years, Rocha worked as a volunteer at Pasadena City Hall, took computer training classes for senior citizens and kept up her Sunday open house parties.

Rocha is survived by five children, 14 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Photo courtesy of Robert Bolanos

Image
Enrique and Ruby Bolanos
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Photo courtesy of Robert Bolanos

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Enrique Bolanos
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Bobbin & Weavin »

dagosd2000 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image
Pat Valentino vs Tony Bosnich
I bet Valentino never used a napkin.
The shorter man in the picture is Joe Herman co-owner of the old Newman & Herman's Gym in S.F. Joe worked corners, managed fighters, including Henry Clark in the 60s & 70s, ran the gym with Billy Newman, promoted, matchmaker, publicist even rumored to have the inside edge to sign Cassius Clay coming out of the Olympics. If it had to do with boxing in the Bay Area Joe was involved.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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kikibalt wrote:Photo courtesy of Robert Bolanos

Image
Enrique and Ruby Bolanos
ROSTROS MEXICANOS

Funny,but I know Mexican paintings are splashed with color,but when I think of Mexican photographs I see Sepia brown ,stoic faces,Earth Tone suits,dark lipstick on the mouthes of the women. The husband sitting on the sofa. His wife standing behind him with her hand on his shoulder. The children by his side. I always see these photographs in every house and rancho and apartemento. They're on the wall in the sala.Perhaps just the husband and wife together. Expressionless faces that mirror a simple relationship.Open the photo albums. There they are again. Black and white. Sepia images. Passive faces.Maybe a gentle smile. Arms straight down. Nothing showing that isn't something else. This is who we are they are saying. Basic. Nothing grandiose. A Jose. A Lupe. The trimmed moustache. The permament wave. Couples young with the family ahead of them. Los Viejos with their family following behind them.

The Sepia photograph with the entire family. Los abuelos in the center. Expressionless faces that have many many stories.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

Paul Thorn, former Duran opponent (1988), now rock star... You can see the Duran fight on youtube, by the way. Thorn is willing but raw and continually bumps heads with Duran in the opening couple of rounds, accidentally. Duran responds by dropping the transplanted Swede with a cracking right hand and Thorn gets on his bike. Both men are badly cut, but Thorn's cut mouth forces a stoppage in the middle rounds; Duran's strength had taken over by then.

http://www.pantagraph.com/articles/2008 ... 234304.txt
Last edited by bennie on 17 Oct 2008, 03:04, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

Boxingnut wrote:
bennie wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Article courtesy of Robby

Image
Big, big win for Frankie Junior. One of his best, Frankie?
Bennie, the magazine (The Ring) I scanned the article from had Frankie as the #1 contender so you are right it was a big, big win.
Cheers, Rob. :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

kikibalt wrote:Bennie, a couple of pics. of Diana Dors

Image

Image
Cheers, Frankie. Dors developed a thyroid problem as she got older (shades of Don Cockell) and jumped from lightweight to heavy but she still looked pretty damned good in the flesh.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Photo courtesy of Robert Bolanos

Image
Enrique Bolanos, Baby Arizmendi and their ladies
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Photo courtesy of Robert Bolanos

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Enrique and Ruby Bolanos
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